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- Attention_restoration_theory abstract "Attention Restoration Theory (ART) asserts that people can concentrate better after spending time in nature, or even looking at scenes of nature. Natural environments abound with "soft fascinations" which a person can reflect upon in "effortless attention", such as clouds moving across the sky, leaves rustling in a breeze or water bubbling over rocks in a stream. The theory was developed by Rachel and Stephen Kaplan in the 1980s in their book The experience of nature: A psychological perspective, and has since been found by others to hold true in medical outcomes as well as intellectual task attention, as described below. Berman et al discuss the foundation of the Attention Restoration Theory (ART). "ART is based on past research showing the separation of attention into two components: involuntary attention, where attention is captured by inherently intriguing or important stimuli, and voluntary or directed attention, where attention is directed by cognitive-control processes."".
- Attention_restoration_theory wikiPageID "24297453".
- Attention_restoration_theory wikiPageRevisionID "599887322".
- Attention_restoration_theory hasPhotoCollection Attention_restoration_theory.
- Attention_restoration_theory subject Category:Attention.
- Attention_restoration_theory subject Category:Behavioral_concepts.
- Attention_restoration_theory type Abstraction100002137.
- Attention_restoration_theory type BehavioralConcepts.
- Attention_restoration_theory type Cognition100023271.
- Attention_restoration_theory type Concept105835747.
- Attention_restoration_theory type Content105809192.
- Attention_restoration_theory type Idea105833840.
- Attention_restoration_theory type PsychologicalFeature100023100.
- Attention_restoration_theory comment "Attention Restoration Theory (ART) asserts that people can concentrate better after spending time in nature, or even looking at scenes of nature. Natural environments abound with "soft fascinations" which a person can reflect upon in "effortless attention", such as clouds moving across the sky, leaves rustling in a breeze or water bubbling over rocks in a stream.".
- Attention_restoration_theory label "Attention restoration theory".
- Attention_restoration_theory sameAs m.07s9cy1.
- Attention_restoration_theory sameAs Q4818224.
- Attention_restoration_theory sameAs Q4818224.
- Attention_restoration_theory sameAs Attention_restoration_theory.
- Attention_restoration_theory wasDerivedFrom Attention_restoration_theory?oldid=599887322.
- Attention_restoration_theory isPrimaryTopicOf Attention_restoration_theory.